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Most intense drought triples area in Arkansas


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Drought Map
Drought Map
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Updated: 7/19/2012 9:01 am Published: 7/19/2012 8:55 am
LITTLE ROCK, AR - Exceptional drought, the most intense type, has more than tripled its size in Arkansas, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor Map released Thursday.

Exceptional drought now covers 10.81 percent of the state, compared with 3.25 percent in the previous week’s map. The most intense drought covers all of Conway and Perry counties, most of Pope County and parts of Faulkner, Garland, Grant, Hot Spring, Johnson, Logan, Pulaski, Saline, Searcy, Van Buren and Yell counties.

Only Columbia County has the least-severe drought rating, abnormally dry, in a small crescent on the Louisiana border.

Recent rain allowed the Arkansas Forestry Commission to reduce the wildfire danger slightly from extreme to high and many counties were removing burn bans. However, triple-digit temperatures returned Wednesday, with a record high of 102 set in Jonesboro and highs well past 100 expected Thursday and Friday for most of the state.

Irrigated crops were in good shape, but pastures and range continued to slide, with 83 percent in poor or very poor condition according to the National Agricultural Statistics Service report on Monday.

On Wednesday, USDA added 11 Arkansas counties to its disaster declaration issued last week. They are: Arkansas, Cleburne, Cleveland, Crittenden, Jefferson, Lee, Lonoke, Monroe, Phillips, Prairie, and St. Francis.

For more information on coping with drought, visit Arkansas Drought Resources at http://arkansasdroughtresourcecenter.wordpress.com/ or contact your county extension office.

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The views expressed here do not necessarily represent those of FOX16 - Breaking News and Weather to Plan Your Day for Little Rock and Central Arkansas

ArkansasYankee - 7/19/2012 2:32 PM
2 Votes
Pray for the farmers and ranchers; not only here, but all over the US. They need them right now; and we are going to need them when the food prices go up.

itsjustme - 7/19/2012 11:42 AM
2 Votes
Do we really need to waste tax dollars paying someone to tell us we are in a drought? Anyone with common sense can see that.
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